By
Allison Powe MISSISSIPPI
STATE -- Students experience information overload, but
educators at Mississippi State University's College of
Veterinary Medicine are teaching professionals a new method
to prepare students for jobs that demand current
information. After
having employed problem-based learning to help students
learn material better and prepare them for evolving careers,
professors at MSU's veterinary college are giving tips to
other institutions that want to design their own PBL
programs. About
145 people came to MSU for the sixth annual workshop on
problem-based learning recently at the CVM. "Many of
our own faculty members from MSU attended, as well as people
from other institutions in the fields of pharmacy, nursing,
physical therapy and education. There were even a couple of
people in music and landscape architecture, but most were
from medical-related professions," said Dr. Phil Bushby,
academic program director at the CVM. "This
workshop has given me a lot of information to apply in my
own teaching. Problem-based learning stresses the importance
of interactive learning in groups," said Dr. J.C. Anderson,
physical therapy and athletic training professor at
Armstrong Atlantic State University in Savannah,
Ga. Problem-based
learning is an innovative alternative to traditional
teaching methods. Instead of relying heavily on lectures,
problem-based learning encourages students to research and
learn by using any resource available to them. "In a
problem-based learning program, the primary focus is
developing life-long learning skills to prepare students for
professions that are continuously advancing and gaining more
information," Bushby said. "There
is no way any veterinary school, medical school or pharmacy
school can teach students in four years all the information
they will need throughout their career," he said. Bushby
said traditional teaching systems may transfer information
efficiently, but problem-based learning can overcome some
existing problems. "Using
traditional teaching methods, it is hard for students to
learn everything they need to know and the material often
becomes obsolete very quickly," Bushby said. Problem-based
learning gives students a system for confronting the
unknown. For each problem that must be solved students use a
four-step process that includes considering facts, ideas,
plans of investigation and learning issues. "When
the students are out of school and confronted with a new
disease, they will not be locked into a memorized system of
education. Instead, they will have the ability and
confidence to use available information to research problems
and find modern solutions," Bushby said. The
goals of problem-based learning are not only to solve the
unknown, but to learn in the process. Students learn
information in a realistic context. "Learning
should not stop at graduation. Graduation should signify
that students are capable of continuously engaging in
self-directed learning so they can keep up with current
information and continue to be competent in their
professions," Bushby said. Speakers
at the workshop included Dr. Howard Barrows and Ann Kelsen,
both of Southern Illinois University School of
Medicine. Bushby
said although problem-based learning at CVM seems
successful, the true measure of success is in how well
graduates of the program perform. The first class to go
through the problem-based learning curriculum graduated this
May. Released:
May 26, 1997
Animal
Health
MSU Vets
Demonstrate New Teaching Methods
Contact: Dr. Phil Bushby, (601) 325-1271
Visit: DAFVM
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Last Modified: Friday, 17-Aug-07 14:30:08
URL: http://msucares.com/news/print/cvm/cvm97/970526pb.htm
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